Inline functions

Using higher-order functions imposes certain runtime penalties: each function is an object, and it captures a closure. A closure is a scope of variables that can be accessed in the body of the function. Memory allocations (both for function objects and classes) and virtual calls introduce runtime overhead.

But it appears that in many cases this kind of overhead can be eliminated by inlining the lambda expressions. The functions shown below are good examples of this situation. The lock() function could be easily inlined at call-sites. Consider the following case:

lock(l) { foo() } 

Instead of creating a function object for the parameter and generating a call, the compiler could emit the following code:

l.lock() try { foo() } finally { l.unlock() } 

To make the compiler do this, mark the lock() function with the inline modifier:

inline fun <T> lock(lock: Lock, body: () -> T): T { ... } 

The inline modifier affects both the function itself and the lambdas passed to it: all of those will be inlined into the call site.

Inlining may cause the generated code to grow. However, if you do it in a reasonable way (avoiding inlining large functions), it will pay off in performance, especially at "megamorphic" call-sites inside loops.

noinline

If you don’t want all of the lambdas passed to an inline function to be inlined, mark some of your function parameters with the noinline modifier:

inline fun foo(inlined: () -> Unit, noinline notInlined: () -> Unit) { ... } 

Inlinable lambdas can only be called inside inline functions or passed as inlinable arguments. noinline lambdas, however, can be manipulated in any way you like, including being stored in fields or passed around.

Non-local returns

In Kotlin, you can only use a normal, unqualified return to exit a named function or an anonymous function. To exit a lambda, use a label. A bare return is forbidden inside a lambda because a lambda cannot make the enclosing function return:

fun ordinaryFunction(block: () -> Unit) { println("hi!") } //sampleStart fun foo() { ordinaryFunction { return // ERROR: cannot make `foo` return here } } //sampleEnd fun main() { foo() } 

But if the function the lambda is passed to is inlined, the return can be inlined, as well. So it is allowed:

inline fun inlined(block: () -> Unit) { println("hi!") } //sampleStart fun foo() { inlined { return // OK: the lambda is inlined } } //sampleEnd fun main() { foo() } 

Such returns (located in a lambda, but exiting the enclosing function) are called non-local returns. This sort of construct usually occurs in loops, which inline functions often enclose:

fun hasZeros(ints: List<Int>): Boolean { ints.forEach { if (it == 0) return true // returns from hasZeros } return false } 

Note that some inline functions may call the lambdas passed to them as parameters not directly from the function body, but from another execution context, such as a local object or a nested function. In such cases, non-local control flow is also not allowed in the lambdas. To indicate that the lambda parameter of the inline function cannot use non-local returns, mark the lambda parameter with the crossinline modifier:

inline fun f(crossinline body: () -> Unit) { val f = object: Runnable { override fun run() = body() } // ... } 

Reified type parameters

Sometimes you need to access a type passed as a parameter:

fun <T> TreeNode.findParentOfType(clazz: Class<T>): T? { var p = parent while (p != null && !clazz.isInstance(p)) { p = p.parent } @Suppress("UNCHECKED_CAST") return p as T? } 

Here, you walk up a tree and use reflection to check whether a node has a certain type. It’s all fine, but the call site is not very pretty:

treeNode.findParentOfType(MyTreeNode::class.java) 

A better solution would be to simply pass a type to this function. You can call it as follows:

treeNode.findParentOfType<MyTreeNode>() 

To enable this, inline functions support reified type parameters, so you can write something like this:

inline fun <reified T> TreeNode.findParentOfType(): T? { var p = parent while (p != null && p !is T) { p = p.parent } return p as T? } 

The code above qualifies the type parameter with the reified modifier to make it accessible inside the function, almost as if it were a normal class. Since the function is inlined, no reflection is needed and normal operators like !is and as are now available for you to use. Also, you can call the function as shown above: myTree.findParentOfType<MyTreeNodeType>().

Though reflection may not be needed in many cases, you can still use it with a reified type parameter:

inline fun <reified T> membersOf() = T::class.members fun main(s: Array<String>) { println(membersOf<StringBuilder>().joinToString("\n")) } 

Normal functions (not marked as inline) cannot have reified parameters. A type that does not have a run-time representation (for example, a non-reified type parameter or a fictitious type like Nothing) cannot be used as an argument for a reified type parameter.

Inline properties

The inline modifier can be used on accessors of properties that don't have backing fields. You can annotate individual property accessors:

val foo: Foo inline get() = Foo() var bar: Bar get() = ... inline set(v) { ... } 

You can also annotate an entire property, which marks both of its accessors as inline:

inline var bar: Bar get() = ... set(v) { ... } 

At the call site, inline accessors are inlined as regular inline functions.

Restrictions for public API inline functions

When an inline function is public or protected but is not a part of a private or internal declaration, it is considered a module 's public API. It can be called in other modules and is inlined at such call sites as well.

This imposes certain risks of binary incompatibility caused by changes in the module that declares an inline function in case the calling module is not re-compiled after the change.

To eliminate the risk of such incompatibility being introduced by a change in a non -public API of a module, public API inline functions are not allowed to use non-public-API declarations, i.e. private and internal declarations and their parts, in their bodies.

An internal declaration can be annotated with @PublishedApi, which allows its use in public API inline functions. When an internal inline function is marked as @PublishedApi, its body is checked too, as if it were public.

Last modified: 07 October 2021

© 2010–2021 JetBrains s.r.o. and Kotlin Programming Language contributors
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://kotlinlang.org/docs/inline-functions.html